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         Woolf Virginia:     more books (100)
  1. Virginia Woolf by Hermione Lee, 1999-10-05
  2. Virginia Woolf Icon (Women in Culture and Society Series) by Brenda R. Silver, 2000-01-15
  3. Monday or Tuesday (Hesperus Classics) by Virginia Woolf, 2003-10-01
  4. Reading Virginia Woolf by Julia Briggs, 2006-07-30
  5. The Letters of Virginia Woolf : Vol. 1
  6. Virginia Woolf's to the Lighthouse (Bloom's Modern Critical Interpretations)
  7. Nurse Lugton's Curtain by Virginia Woolf, 2004-04-01
  8. Virginia Woolf: A Writer's Life by Lyndall Gordon, 2001-07
  9. Congenial Spirits: The Selected Letters Of Virginia Woolf by Virginia Woolf, 1991-05-31
  10. Gifts, Markets and Economies of Desire in Virginia Woolf by Kathryn Simpson, 2008-11-15
  11. Virginia Woolf by James King, 1995-04
  12. Trespassing Boundaries: Virginia Woolf's Short Fiction
  13. Leonard and Virginia Woolf: A Literary Partnership by Peter F. Alexander, 1992-12
  14. Restless Genius: The Story of Virginia Woolf (Writers of Imagination) by Virginia Brackett, 2004-09-30

61. The Greatest Literature Of All Time - Virginia Woolf
Woolf, Virginia (18821941). Who s afraid of Virginia Woolf? askeda famous play in the 1960s? The answer might be Undergraduate
http://www.editoreric.com/greatlit/authors/Woolf.html
See also: Mrs Dalloway To the Lighthouse Home pages: The Greatest Literature
of All Time
Selected Authors Selected Greatest Works ... Editor Eric WOOLF, Virginia "Who's afraid of Virginia Woolf?" asked a famous play in the 1960s? The answer might be: Undergraduate students, for having to work through her dense, poetic, stream-of-consciousness novels in English courses. Or the answer could be: The general reading public who know her stuff is supposed to be good for them but struggle with it because, like, nothing happens in her stories. Or her intellectual friends who often found themselves portrayed, thinly disguised, in her writing. (Novelist D.H. Lawrence, playwright George Bernard Shaw and philosopher G.E. Moore are supposedly among those so exposed.) Or chauvinistic men, for she has been taken up as somewhat of a feminist icon. Her ability to strike fear aside, Virginia Woolf is one of the acknowledged giants of twentieth-century British literature. Adeline Virginia Stephen was born into an aristocratic literary family in London, England. In her twenties she founded with her brother an intellectual circle known as the Bloomsbury Group, which included some of the leading writers, philosophers, artists and politicians of the day. She and husband Leonard Woolf (married 1912) started Hogarth Press which printed works by Katherine Mansfield, T.S. Eliot and eventually Virginia Woolf's own writing.

62. Bloomsbury: Omega & Hogarth
Thoby Stephen (18801906; brother). Virginia Stephen Woolf (1882-1941). AdrianStephen (1883-1948; brother). Clive Bell (art critic; married Vanessa).
http://www.walrus.com/~gibralto/acorn/germ/Bloomsbury.html
Bloomsbury:
    The age of the free artist is past; the artist must learn to function under new conditions and above all retain his private vision which is destroyed by political ideology or moral ideas.
    Duncan Grant (notes for a lecture)
46 Gordon Square was where the Stephen sisters, Vanessa and Virginia , held court over Bloomsbury. The year was 1905. Vanessa Stephen Bell
Thoby Stephen
(1880-1906; brother) Virginia Stephen Woolf
Adrian Stephen
(1883-1948; brother) Clive Bell
(art critic; married Vanessa) Leonard Woolf
(political writer; married Virginia) Roger Fry
(1866-1934; art critic and painter) Duncan Grant
(1885-1978; painter) Dora Carrington
(1893-1932; Omega/Hogarth artist) Thursday evening attendees could include Shaw, Yeats, Arnold Bennett as well as luminary Lytton Strachley, the biographer, journalist/editor Desmond MacCarthy and his wife Molly, enigmatic civil servant Saxon Sydney-Turner, artist Marion Richardson, novelist E.M. Forster and economist John Maynard Keynes. Later John Lehmann, Frances Marshall, Raymond Mortimer, sculptor Stephen Tomlin, and Vanessa's son Quentin Bell could all be considered part of the New Bloomsbury group. The French Post-Impressionists (like Cezanne and Matisse) were a major influence on the painters and art critics of the group. Young artist Duncan Grant was thrilled by a Manet exhibit and wrote:

63. BrothersJudd.com - Review Of Virginia Woolf's To The Lighthouse
Woolf, A Room of One s Own CHAT Virginia Woolf Lecture Hall (mobydicks) -WEBRINGVirginia Woolf Webring -LINKS Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)(about.com
http://www.brothersjudd.com/index.cfm/fuseaction/reviews.detail/book_id/879/To t
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To the Lighthouse
Modern Library Top 100 Novels of the 20th Century (15)
Author Info: Virginia Woolf
Okay, I read a bunch of criticism to figure out why this book is on the list, never mind why it's so high on the list. As one would expect, the critics are awash in psychoblither. But there's one thing I didn't see, and it's the obvious one, Virginia Woolf was consumed by penis envy. What the hell else could the title of the freakin' book mean? Let's parse the phrase:
To: towards the: the Lighthouse: enormous erect phallus
I'm thinking you don't need a graduate degree to figure this one out.
(Reviewed:01-Dec-98)
Grade: ( F
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Virginia Woolf books reviewed)
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Library Journal: Top 150 of the Century

Modern Library Top 100 Novels of the 20th Century

New York Public Library's Books of the Century
Virginia Woolf Links: -OBITUARY : Virginia Woolf Believed Dead : Novelist Is Thought to Have Been Drowned FridayHad Been Ill (The New York Times, April 3, 1941) -ESSAY: The Virginia Woolf of 'The Hours' Angers the Real One's Fans : At conferences, over dinner and through e-mail lists, many Woolf aficionados are fuming over the writer's portrayal as a pathetic, suicide-obsessed creature. (PATRICIA COHEN, 2/15/03, NY Times)

64. BrothersJudd.com - Books By Virginia Woolf Reviewed
A Room of One s Own (1929) Virginia Woolf (1882-1941) (GradeC+).To the Lighthouse (1927) - Virginia Woolf (1882-1941) (GradeF).
http://www.brothersjudd.com/index.cfm/fuseaction/reviews.authlist/author_id/369
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Author: Virginia Woolf
Links:
-OBITUARY : Virginia Woolf Believed Dead
: Novelist Is Thought to Have Been Drowned FridayHad Been Ill (The New York Times, April 3, 1941)
-ESSAY: The Virginia Woolf of 'The Hours' Angers the Real One's Fans
: At conferences, over dinner and through e-mail lists, many Woolf aficionados are fuming over the writer's portrayal as a pathetic, suicide-obsessed creature. (PATRICIA COHEN, 2/15/03, NY Times)
-REVIEW: of The Hours
(Joseph Phelan and Colin Pearce, Claremont Institute) A Room of One's Own Virginia Woolf (Grade:C+)
To the Lighthouse
Virginia Woolf (Grade:F)

65. El Autor De La Semana: Virginia Woolf
Translate this page El Autor de la Semana. Virginia Woolf (1882-1941). Novelista y críticabritánica cuya técnica del monólogo interior y estilo poético
http://rehue.csociales.uchile.cl/rehuehome/facultad/publicaciones/autores/woolf/
UNIVERSIDAD DE CHILE FACULTAD DE CIENCIAS SOCIALES El Autor de la Semana Virginia Woolf
Novelista y crítica británica cuya técnica del monólogo interior y estilo poético se consideran entre las contribuciones más importantes a la novela moderna. Sus primeras novelas, Fin de viaje Noche y día (1919) y El cuarto de Jacob (1922), ponen de manifiesto su determinación por ampliar las perspectivas de la novela más allá del mero acto de la narración. En sus novelas siguientes, La señora Dalloway (1925) y Al faro (1927), el argumento surge de la vida interior de los personajes, y los efectos psicológicos se logran a través de imágenes, símbolos y metáforas. Los personajes se despliegan gracias al flujo y reflujo de sus impresiones personales, sentimientos y pensamientos: un monólogo interior en el que los seres humanos y sus circunstancias normales aparecen como extraordinarios. Influida por el filósofo francés Henri Bergson, Woolf, como el escritor francés Marcel Proust, se adentra en la idea del tiempo. Los acontecimientos en La señora Dalloway abarcan un espacio de doce horas y el transcurso del tiempo se expresa a través de los cambios que paso a paso se suceden en el interior de los personajes, en la conciencia que tienen de sí mismos, de los demás y de sus mundos caleidoscópicos. De sus restantes novelas

66. Archives Hub: Monks House Papers: Papers Of Virginia Woolf And Related Papers Of
University of Sussex Library Extent 26 boxes; 6.5 cubic feet Name of Creator Woolf,Adeline Virginia (18821941); Woolf, Leonard Sidney (1880-1969) Level of
http://www.archiveshub.ac.uk/news/vlwoolf.html
Archives Hub Helpdesk email archiveshub@mimas.ac.uk
Phone +44 (0)161 275 6789
Monks House Papers: papers of Virginia Woolf and related papers of Leonard Woolf
Reference GB 0181 SxMs 18
Title : Monks House Papers: papers of Virginia Woolf and related papers of Leonard Woolf
Dates of creation
Held at : University of Sussex Library
Extent : 26 boxes; 6.5 cubic feet
Name of Creator : Woolf, Adeline Virginia (1882-1941); Woolf, Leonard Sidney (1880-1969)
Level of Description : fonds
Language of Material : eng
Administrative/Biographical History
(Adeline) Virginia Woolf (1882-1941), novelist and critic, was born on 25 January 1882 in London, the second daughter of (Sir) Leslie Stephen. Too delicate for the rigours of regular school, she spent her childhood at her family's London house in Hyde Park Gate and country home at St. Ives in Cornwall. Her mother's death in 1895 precipitated the first of the nervous breakdowns which punctuated her life. Her father's death in 1904 was followed by another, but that was also the year of her first published work. After this Virginia, together with her sister Vanessa and her brother Adrian, settled in Gordon Square where they collected round them a group of brilliant young men whom their elder brother Thoby had got to know at Cambridge; notably Roger Fry, J. M. (later Lord) Keynes, Lytton Strachey, E. M. Forster, Leonard Woolf, and Clive Bell. Thus was inaugurated 'the Bloomsbury group'. In 1912 she married Leonard Sidney Woolf (1880-1969). In 1914 she had another serious breakdown, and although after a year she recovered, for the rest of her life her husband saw to it that she lived very quietly. They lived partly in London and partly in Sussex, where in 1919 they purchased at Monks House, at Rodmell, near Lewes, East Sussex. It was during this period that her chief work was done and her fame established. Of her novels

67. Arts, Literature, Authors, W: Woolf, Virginia
everywhere. Virginia Woolf, (18821941), English novelist, critic andessayist. Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
http://www.combose.com/Arts/Literature/Authors/W/Woolf,_Virginia/
Top Arts Literature Authors ... Works Related links of interest:

68. Archive Record
volume. CONTEXT AREA. Name of creator(s) Woolf Adeline Virginia 18821941 Novelist and Critic nee Stephen. Administrative/Biographical
http://www.genesis.ac.uk/archive.jsp?typeofsearch=i&term=notimpl&highlight=1&pk=

69. BiblioVault
Dalsimer Publisher Yale University Press, 2001 ISBN 0300-09208-3 (Cloth) Subjectheadings Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941 Criticism and interpretation.
http://www.bibliovault.org/BV.book.epl?BookId=4825&Title=Virginia Woolf

70. Woolf, Virginia (Litteraturnettet)
OM VIRUS OG SPAM. Woolf, Virginia Storbritannia 18821941. LenkerBooks and Writers Biografi. SØK ETTER Woolf, Virginia. SØK I
http://www.litteraturnettet.no/w/woolf.virginia.asp?lang=&type=

71. Procedures For Cataloging Monographic Photo-reproductions
16 600 10 Woolf, Virginia, d 18821941 x Books and reading. ¶ 17 600 10 Woolf, Virginia, d 1882-1941 x Manuscripts x Facsimiles.
http://www.library.unlv.edu/cat/procs/photorep.html
PROCEDURES FOR CATALOGING MONOGRAPHIC PHOTO-REPRODUCTIONS
OCLC policy at present is that for an unpublished thesis or dissertation, each of the following should be entered as a separate record:
  • The ORIGINAL thesis (without a 533 or the equivalent)
  • A PHOTOCOPY of the thesis (533 or equivalent says "Photocopy")
  • A MICROFILM reproduction of the thesis (533 or equivalent says "Microfilm," "Microfiche," etc.) A photocopy should NOT be cataloged using an original or microfilm record, nor should a microfilm, fiche, etc. be cataloged using a photocopy record. Doing so creates problems for Document Delivery Services. These same principles apply to monographs. In other words, don't use the bibliographic record for an original edition to catalog a photocopy or a microfilm reproduction, and vice versa. SEARCHING
    ALL available records, of all three types, should be on screen or printed out, as call numbers, subject headings, etc. may be usefully "borrowed." CATALOGING
    Use the appropriate record, if available. If NOT available, use an existing record and
  • 72. Great Books Index - Virginia Woolf
    Virginia Woolf Great Books Index. Virginia Woolf (18821941) An Index to Online Great Books in English Translation Have you written an online publication about Virginia Woolf? Please send
    http://books.mirror.org/gb.woolf-virginia.html
    GREAT BOOKS INDEX
    Virginia Woolf (18821941)
    An Index to Online Great Books in English Translation AUTHORS/HOME TITLES ABOUT GB INDEX BOOK LINKS Virginia Woolf Voyage Out Night and Day Articles The Voyage Out
    [Back to Top of Page] Night and Day
    [Back to Top of Page] Links to Information About Virginia Woolf [Back to Top of Page] GREAT BOOKS INDEX MENU
    Great Books Index Home Page and Author List

    List of All Works by Author and Title [90KB]
    About the Great Books Index Links to Other Great Books and Literature Sites ... Literary Cryptograms Support for the Great Books Index web pages is provided by Ken Roberts Computer Consultants Inc URL: http://books.mirror.org/gb.woolf-virginia.html Last revised January 11, 1999 by Ken Roberts e-mail ken@mirror.org

    73. Virginia Woolf, A Room Of One's Own (1929)
    Virginia Woolf, A Room of One's Own. ( 1929) Virginia Woolf, one of the founders of the movement known as Modernism, is one of the most important woman writers in English.
    http://www.library.csi.cuny.edu/dept/history/lavender/ownroom.html
    Virginia Woolf, A Room of One's Own
    Virginia Woolf, one of the founders of the movement known as Modernism, is one of the most important woman writers in English. Her "stream-of-consciousness" essays and novels provide an invaluable insight into both her own life experiences and those of women at the beginning of the twentieth century. Her most famous works include Mrs. Dalloway To the Lighthouse Orlando: A Biography The Waves (1931), and her most recognized work, A Room of One's Own A Room of One's Own is an extended essay, based on Woolf's lectures at a women's college at Cambridge University in 1928. In it, Woolf addresses her thoughts on "the question of women and fiction," interpreted by Woolf as many questions. In A Room of One's Own , Woolf ponders the significant question of whether or not a woman could produce art of the high quality of Shakespeare. In doing so, she examines women's historical experience as well as the distinctive struggle of the woman artist.
    Questions to Think About:
    What is the meaning of the title of this piece?

    74. The Virginia Woolf Society Of Great Britain
    The Virginia Woolf Society. of Great Britain Useful Links. Virginia Woolf Societies. Virginia Woolf Related Sites copyright © The Virginia Woolf Society of Great Britain 19982001If
    http://www.orlando.jp.org/VWSGB
    What's New? [TEXT ONLY VERSION]
    The Virginia Woolf Society
    of Great Britain
    Hon. President: Angelica Garnett
    updated 5 Mar 2003 What's New?

    75. Virginia Woolf
    Virginia Woolf s books were published by Hogart Press, which shefounded with her husband, the critic and writer Leonard Woolf.
    http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/vwoolf.htm
    Choose another writer in this calendar: by name:
    A
    B C D ... Z by birthday from the calendar Credits and feedback Virginia Woolf (1882-1941) - in full Adeline Virginia Woolf, original surname Stephen British author who made an original contribution to the form of the novel - also distinguished feminist essayist, critic in The Times Literary Supplement , and a central figure of Bloomsbury group. Virginia Woolf's books were published by Hogart Press, which she founded with her husband, the critic and writer Leonard Woolf. Originally their printing machine was small enough to fit on a kitchen table, but their publications later included T.S. Eliot's Waste Land (1922), fiction by Maxim Gorky, E.M. Forster, and Katherine Mansfield, and the complete twenty-four-volume translation of the works of Sigmund Freud. "Have you any notion how many books are written about women in the course of one year? Have you any notion how many are written by men? Are you aware that you are, perhaps, the most discussed animal in the universe?" Virginia Woolf was born in London, as the daughter of Julia Jackson Duckworth, a member of the Duckworth publishing family, and Sir Leslie Stephen, a literary critic, a friend of Meredith, Henry James, Tennyson, Matthew Arnold, and George Eliot, and the founder of the

    76. Virginia Woolf On Women And Fiction - A Distance Learning Project
    Virginia Woolf Distance Learning Project Virginia Woolf on Women and Fiction - Home Page
    http://www.cygneis.com/woolf
    This page uses frames, but your browser doesn't support them. click here to continue.

    77. Virginia Woolf, 1882 - 1941
    Virginia Woolf, 1882 1941 Author of this Webpage Renée GoodvinText-Only Version. Virginia Woolf was an English novelist and
    http://www.geocities.com/blondelibrarian/literaryexplorer/authors/vwoolf.html
    Virginia Woolf, 1882 - 1941 Author of this Webpage: Renée Goodvin
    Text-Only Version
    V irginia Woolf was an English novelist and critic during the Modern Period whose writings are highly esteemed by modern feminist critics. Adeline Virginia Stephen was born in London on January 25, 1882. She was one of four children of the prominent Victorian critic, philosopher, biographer, and scholar, Leslie Stephen. In 1904, Virginia's father died. At that time she settled with her sister and two brothers in the Bloomsbury district of London. During this time, Virginia, her brothers and her sister became affiliated with the intellectual circle known as "The Bloomsbury Group." The Bloomsbury Group included highly prominent thinkers of the day such as the biographer Lytton Strachey, the economist J.M. Keynes, the art critics Roger Fry and Clive Bell, the writer E.M. Forester, and the journalist and essayist Leonard Woolf. In 1912, Virginia married Leonard Woolf. Five years later, in 1917, the Woolfs founded the Hogarth Press which in addition to publishing Virginia's writings, also published many of the era's most renowned texts; such the English translations of Freud and manuscripts by T.S. Eliot

    78. Virginia Woolf, 1882 - 1941
    Virginia Woolf, 1882 1941 Author of this Webpage Renée Goodvin GraphicsVersion. Virginia Woolf was an English novelist and critic
    http://www.geocities.com/blondelibrarian/literaryexplorer/authors/textonly/vwool
    Virginia Woolf, 1882 - 1941
    Author of this Webpage: Renée Goodvin
    Graphics Version
    V irginia Woolf was an English novelist and critic during the Modern Period whose writings are highly esteemed by modern feminist critics. Adeline Virginia Stephen was born in London on January 25, 1882. She was one of four children of the prominent Victorian critic, philosopher, biographer, and scholar, Leslie Stephen. In 1904, Virginia's father died. At that time she settled with her sister and two brothers in the Bloomsbury district of London. During this time, Virginia, her brothers and her sister became affiliated with the intellectual circle known as "The Bloomsbury Group." The Bloomsbury Group included highly prominent thinkers of the day such as the biographer Lytton Strachey, the economist J.M. Keynes, the art critics Roger Fry and Clive Bell, the writer E.M. Forester, and the journalist and essayist Leonard Woolf. In 1912, Virginia married Leonard Woolf. Five years later, in 1917, the Woolfs founded the Hogarth Press which in addition to publishing Virginia's writings, also published many of the era's most renowned texts; such the English translations of Freud and manuscripts by T.S. Eliot

    79. BBC - BBC Four - Audio Interviews - Virginia Woolf
    Send it to a friend! Virginia Woolf 1882 1941, Words Fail Me 29 April1937 BBC Virginia Woolf gives, Audioa eulogy to words 7 min 29.
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcfour/audiointerviews/profilepages/woolfv1.shtml
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    ... Help Like this page? Send it to a friend! Virginia Woolf 1882 - 1941 Words Fail Me 29 April 1937 BBC Virginia Woolf gives a eulogy to words 7 min 29 You will need RealPlayer to access these clips. Visit WebWise for help downloading RealPlayer Virginia Woolf English novelist, essayist and critic Innovative novelist, perceptive critic, and pioneering feminist essayist, Virginia Woolf made a major contribution to the development of the novel with her impressionistic style. Read more Further Links BBC Art that Shook the World: Orlando Audio Interviews A-Z A-B C-D E-H I-L ... U-Z

    80. Virginia Woolf - Her Life And Works
    Her dates of 1882 1941 are exactly those of James Joyce.. Virginia Woolf - Clickcover for details at Amazon.co.uk Virginia Woolf, a biography by Hermione
    http://www.mantex.co.uk/ou/a319/woolf-01.htm
    Home Tutorials Bookshop Software ... Subscribe here for our free email newsletter Virginia Woolf
    her life and works
    . Born (25 Jan) Adeline Virginia Stephen, third child of Leslie Stephen (Victorian man of letters - first editor of the Dictionary of National Biography ) - and Julia Duckworth (of the Duckworth publishing family). [James Joyce was born in same year.] Comfortable upper middle class background. Her father had previously been married to the daughter of the novelist William Makepeace Thackery. Brothers Thoby and Adrian went to Cambridge, and her sister Vanessa became a painter. Virginia was educated by private tutors and by extensive reading of literary classics in her father's library. . Death of her mother. VW has the first of many nervous breakdowns. . Travels in France with her sister Vanessa. . Death of half-sister, Stella. VW learning Greek and History at King's College London. . Brother Thoby enters Trinity College, Cambridge and subsequently meets Lytton Strachey , Leonard Woolf, and Clive Bell. These Cambridge friends subsequently become known as the Bloomsbury Group , of which VW was an important and influential member.

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